Post #58,838
10/23/02 12:22:27 PM
|
Then I hereby nominate ... objectification
Object sounds static. Objectification implies the act of objectification as well. :-p
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
|
Post #58,841
10/23/02 12:24:56 PM
|
Re: Then I hereby nominate ... objectification
[link|http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=objectification|"objectification"]
The act of objectifying something.
Date: circa 1837
This one is over 100 years older than instantiation. ;-) Thanks for playing, drive through.
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
|
Post #58,843
10/23/02 12:27:28 PM
|
He meant "objectifaction"
defn: Making a rotten object (from "object putrefaction").
-drl
|
Post #58,844
10/23/02 12:29:04 PM
|
Re: He meant "objectifaction"
[link|http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=objectifaction|"objectifaction"]
That one actually works as a joke. ;-)
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
|
Post #58,863
10/23/02 1:31:13 PM
|
Not as a noun, though
You're using "instantiation" as a noun. Then "objectification" would have to be a noun also. As in, "The input to this function is an objectification."
Thank you for playing.
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
|
Post #58,884
10/23/02 2:21:20 PM
|
Objectification IS a noun, you knob.
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
|
Post #58,888
10/23/02 2:43:50 PM
|
Umm, well, yeah, but ... uhhh
CrrrrrrrAP!
I'm even forced to admit that it's possible "instantiation" might have been correct in the first instance.
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
|
Post #58,889
10/23/02 2:44:36 PM
|
Welll...
WTF did you think I linked to Merriam Webster for...?
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
|
Post #59,009
10/24/02 2:01:53 AM
|
You've been using that a lot lately.
"knob", that is. It sounds so British. Do you know where you picked it up from?
Wade
"Ah. One of the difficult questions."
|
Post #59,015
10/24/02 3:11:38 AM
|
Well I know where *I* got it from
Larry Wall. [link|http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/06/1343222&mode=thread&tid=145|Perl 6 will give you the big knob.]
Cheers, Ben
"Career politicians are inherently untrustworthy; if it spends its life buzzing around the outhouse, it\ufffds probably a fly." - [link|http://www.nationalinterest.org/issues/58/Mead.html|Walter Mead]
|
Post #59,032
10/24/02 7:54:05 AM
|
My (obvious) guess: Peter.
You know, [link|/forums/render/user?username=pwhysall|pwhysall].
(Wow -- these WeirdCode thingies seem to be *working*! :-)
Christian R. Conrad Microsoft is a true reflection of Bill Gates' personality - the sleaziest, most unethical, ugliest little rat's ass the world has seen unto this time. -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=42971|Andrew Grygus]
|
Post #59,039
10/24/02 9:07:48 AM
|
Dunno.
Just one of those things I picked up somewhere.
I tend to use an eclectic collection of phrases, given how many shady characters from around the world I associate with. ;-)
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
|